This blog is dedicated to the struggles of people everywhere to advance human progress and save this planet from the decline of capitalism. Its focus, since 2011 has been supporting the emerging revolutions everywhere.

630 Slaughtered in new massacre in Syria

In the wake of President Obama's warning to the Assad regime that using "a whole bunch of chemical weapons" would be a "redline" that might cause him to rethink his approach of not interfering with the on-going carnage in Syria, the regime has slaughtered 630 civilians in Daraya, Syria this week without using any chemical weapons at all, according to a reports from the Local Coordinating Committee.

Daraya had been known for its peaceful resistance to the regime. Things didn't descend into chaos after the regime completely withdrew its security forces from the community several months ago. Instead, community activists and volunteers started running this community of 200,000 in the shadow of Damascus with a quiet efficiency that completely unnerved the regime. Without the regime forces, there were no ethnic clashes and very little crime. This was the regime's response to their non-violent opposition. All men found of "fighting age" were slaughtered but women and children weren't spared. They too were killed in large numbers.

THEIR SCREAMS OF PAIN AND FEAR ARE DEAFENING AND HEARTBREAKING BUT IS ANYONE LISTENING? Aleppo (Qady Al Asker): Aug 26, 2012 - Is anyone willing to help these children? Or are they resigned to a fate of more shelling only to end up dead or severely injured and back in dirty, understaffed and undersupplied make-shift clinics?

Thanks @LccSy

***HORRIFYING & EXTREMELY GRAPHIC*** THIS IS THE FINAL IMAGE HIS PARENTS WILL HAVE OF HIM. Daraa (Busr Al Sham): Aug 26 2012 - Words cannot describe this scene. Its not out of a horror moive. Its not your imagination. The first boy in the opening scenes is a real human. He was horrifically killed when a Russian made and supplied helicopter fired rockets into his home, tearing the top part of his skull off and covering him in dust, thus making this little child appear out of some horror movie.

But this is not a horror movie. This child was a son to loving parents. He went to school. He had dreams. He used to play in the streets like all kids. Yet this is how he will be remembered by his family. This is how the world (that cares to look) will see him.

If we, working collectively, can not stop the carnage that is going on in Syria, or if we refuse to, we have signed our own Death Warrant as a species on this planet.

'Atrocity on a new scale'? Syrians piece together story of Daraya massacreThe Syrian opposition is disseminating video footage from the town of Daraya this weekend that tells of a government massacre that may have left more than 600 people dead.
By Arthur Bright, Staff writer / August 27, 2012

New video footage has provided graphic evidence of a massacre reportedly committed by forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in the Damascus suburb of Daraya. If reports from the London-based Syrian Observatory of Human Rights of more than 300 dead are confirmed, "it would be an atrocity of a new scale" in the Syrian conflict, a British diplomat warned.

Over the weekend, activists posted multiple bloody videos of the victims of what they say was a coordinated massacre of citizens of Daraya  mostly young men of fighting age, although women and children were killed as well  that began on Friday.

The Assad forces killed them in cold blood, Abu Ahmad, a resident of Daraya, told The New York Times. I saw dozens of dead people, killed by the knives at the end of Kalashnikovs, or by gunfire. The regime finished off whole families, a father, mother and their children. They just killed them without any pretext.

The Local Coordination Committees activist group said that some 150 bodies were found Saturday night in the basement of a mosque in what seems to be the largest single killing site, though additional sites continue to be found  another 15 bodies were found in the basement of a home on Sunday. The LCC puts the death toll for the week in Daraya at more than 630.

Daraya, a city of dignity, has paid a heavy price for demanding freedom, the group said in a statement, adding: The death toll has doubled in the past few days due to field executions and revenge killings.More...

IT IS difficult to distinguish one gruesome day from the next in Syria until the devastation of a town is so great that it earns itself a place on the conflicts increasingly bloody timeline: the assault in February on Homss Baba Amr district, the Houla massacre in May, and now Daraya.

The small town on the southwestern edge of the capital Damascus was shelled for several days last week before President Bashar Assads forces stormed in on August 25th, carrying out house-to-house raids and executing men on the spot. At least 200 bodies were found on Saturday, often in basements of houses; more than 350 were killed over the past week. Video footage and photographs from local activists show bloodied corpses laid out in the yard of a mosque, before being lowered into mass graves.

The massacre is part of an intensified offensive by the regime to reassert control in Damascus and beyond. Having failed to stamp out the rebels despite resorting to ever more shelling and aerial bombing, Mr Assad appears to be targeting his efforts more specifically on areas held by or harbouring rebels in an attempt to turn the local populations against the fighters. That may work in some areas of Aleppo, the countrys commercial capital, where although many locals hate the regime there is less support for the opposition fighters. But in smaller towns like Daraya, residents reached by Skype on Sunday put the blame squarely on the regime.

Rebel fighters here apparently withdrew from the town to avoid the regimes wrath, although some may have simply melted back into the civilian population. But any such efforts were futile: the regime sees all young men as a threat, as the fact that the majority of the dead were young men shows. The UN accuses both sides of war crimes, but says that those committed by the government far outweigh those of the rebels. Increasingly, ordinary Syrians are bearing the brunt of the violence. Saturday was the bloodiest day yet, adding to a death toll of 4,000 so far in August.

In Daraya, Syrians are mourning not just the devastation in one town but the increasingly dark fate of the uprising. For months the place was a beacon of non-violent resistance. As other parts picked up arms, protesters in Daraya offered roses and water to the soldiers stationed in their hometown. To no avail. Ghiyath Matar, a young activist committed to non-violent protest, was arrested and tortured to death; others were shot on the spot. Daraya embodies the sad trajectory of Syrias uprising, in which the regimes violence has transformed hopeful protests into a destructive civil war. It will be just one of many places to pay dearly.

DAMASCUS // For a rather non-descript town of drab cement block buildings on the southern outskirts of Damascus, Daraya in two short months acquired a significance far exceeding its size or the apparent ordinariness of its neighbourhoods.

Until the start of last week's all-out assault by regime loyalists, which culminated with the alleged massacre of at least 300 people, the community took up the task of governing themselves - a highly emblematic piece of defiance against a regime that has long warned chaos and Islamic extremism would engulf areas outside of its strict control.

Rather than sliding into anarchy after security forces withdrew entirely from the town this summer, Daraya had instead been run with a certain quiet efficiency by opposition activists and volunteers drawn from the town's 200,000 or so population.

There was no state police in the area, but traffic flowed freely and residents reported little crime. Modest rebuilding projects to repair damage from previous army operations had been carried out, paid for by local donations.

Stores and wood workshops were open, an independent community newspaper was being published and volunteer street cleaners swept and washed down roads. People even queued politely at the local petrol station.

With no security forces on hand to make arrests, activists would stand at major intersections and hand out leaflets designed to educate residents on the key principles of the revolution, as drawn up by committees of local men and women.

The leaflets said there must be equality between all religious and ethnic groups in the new Syria and stressed the importance of ensuring justice and rejecting revenge in dealing with regime officials. They also spelt out that with new freedoms would come enormous responsibilities and duties for every citizen, including caring for the environment and conserving scarce water resources.

Daraya was one of a growing number of places living on the fraying edge of central authority in Syria, but its slide out of the government's grasp was made all the more remarkable by its proximity to the very centre of power. More...

Not surprisingly, the Assad regime has made its own claims that these people were killed by anti-government forces and have produced video propaganda promoting these lies. Here is one such report from the pro-Assad Dunya TV's Michellen Azer that is well critiqued in the subtitles:

2:21 PM PT: So many people ask me what I think should be done that i decided to elevate this from a comment to the main body.

The US should not act as a filter for weapons reaching the opposition.

From the NY Times we have this story about our country's input into this crisis under Obama's leadership:

A small number of C.I.A. officers are operating secretly in southern Turkey, helping allies decide which Syrian opposition fighters across the border will receive arms to fight the Syrian government, according to American officials and Arab intelligence officers.

From the Australian, we have more details about what the American role really amounts to:

the CIA has blocked shipments of heavy anti-tank and anti-aircraft weapons, which rebel units of the Free Syrian Army have long said are vital to their efforts to overthrow the regime of President Bashar al-Assad. At the same time they have approved supplies of AK-47 Kalashnikov rifles, and just over a month ago gave the green light to a shipment of 10,000 Russian-made rocket-propelled grenades.

This is a disgusting policy. What does that make the United States if not accessories to these murders?

So I guess the first thing I want done is for Mr Obama stop this shameless policy of promoting endless war in Syria while at the same time denying the Free Syrian Army the weapons they need to win.

Is he so afraid of what Israel will say if he allows the FSA to get manpads that he is willing to see thousands get slaughtered from the air between now and the election?

Clearly nobody is even considering a no-fly zone, so I find this policy of denying the people being slaughtered the tools with which to defend themselves absolutely criminal.

I hope there is a charge of accessory-to-a-warcrime, and it won't just be the Russians who will be looking at it.

8:36 PM PT: One Kossack, in justifying Obama's policy of imposing the US as a "filter" to make sure no one supplies the Free Syrian Army with effective weapons against armor and aircraft said:

We don't want weapons to wind up in enemy hands and it is probable that at least some of the FSA groups are allied to Al Qaeda. Just because someone is Assad's enemy does not mean it is in our national interest for them to have heavy weapons.

Why is the Obama administration trying to limit who gets arms and block heavy arms from being delivered to the rebels in Syria?

Because most of the arms the rebels have are not secure. There is no organized command structure, alliances between groups are very fluid, and cash is king - almost all the arms in rebel hands are up for sale.

The idea being defended is that these items have a dual use. Yes they could be used to save the people being slaughtered from the air, but they could also be used to challenge our air superiority and endanger us in other ways.

So since we don't directly suffer from the slaughter in Syria, but we may suffer if these weapons should fall into the wrong hands, we should stop them from getting the weapons if we can.

This is the same "dual-use" mentality imperialist powers always exercises where they have that control.

With the Iraq sanctions it meant: We know you need chlorine to purify the water but you could make chemical weapons with it so sorry the children will have to die. Or we know you need anti-biotics to fight diseases but they could also be used in a bio attack, so sorry.

Israel uses the same self-serving "logic" to deny Gaza even the most basic building materials.

The US policy, Obama's policy, the one these Kossacks seem to be defending is precisely the policy that will cost the most Syrian lives. It is a policy of allowing them just enough weapons to continue the fight [ AK-47s and RPG] while denying them the weapons [heavy anti-tank and anti-aircraft weapons] they need to win the fight.

A long civil war in Syria suites US imperialism just fine. First, they really don't want to see Assad go. Obama thought he was on the verge on doing a peace deal with Assad, and he was helping with intel. But they would like to see Assad weakened. And if Assad does have to go, they want to have a say in picking the next king, and they don't have that clout with the FSA yet, so continuing the war gives them time and space to maneuverer.

Of course, that also means that the slaughter of Syrians continues, but US imperialism never worried about that. Didn't in Vietnam or Iraq or now with the drone strikes everywhere. In Syria, the US isn't even doing the killing directly, we're just blocking help from getting to them.

Still, its a lousy, blood-soaked, Machiavellian, imperialism policy and I'm just sorry to see so many Kossacks lining up behind it.